A magical Arabian Nights tale from the captivating creator
of fantasy, Diana Wynne Jones. The dazzling sequel to Howl's Moving Castle.
Far to the south in the Land of Ingary, lives a young carpet
merchant called Abdullah. In his dreams, he is the long-lost son of a great
prince. This dream is a complete castle in the air... or is it?
Abdullah's day-dreams suddenly start to come true when he
meets the exquisite Flower-in-the-Night, daughter of the ferocious Sultan of
Zanzib. Fate has destined them for each other, but a bad-tempered genie, a
hideous djinn, and various villanous bandits have their own ideas. When
Flower-in-the-Night is carried off, Abdullah is determined to rescue her - if
he can find her.
About the Author
Diana Wynne Jones
In a career spanning four decades, award-winning author
Diana Wynne Jones wrote more than forty books of fantasy for young readers.
Characterized by magic, multiple universes, witches and wizards—and a
charismatic nine-lived enchanter—her books were filled with unlimited
imagination, dazzling plots, and an effervescent sense of humor that earned her
legendary status in the world of fantasy. From the very beginning, Diana Wynne
Jones’s books garnered literary accolades: her novel Dogsbody was a runner-up
for the 1975 Carnegie Medal, and Charmed Life won the esteemed Guardian
children’s fiction prize in 1977. Since then, in addition to being translated
into more than twenty languages, her books have earned a wide array of
honors—including two Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Honors—and appeared on
countless best-of-the-year lists. Her work also found commercial success: in
1992 the BBC adapted her novel Archer’s Goon into a six-part miniseries, and
her best-selling Howl’s Moving Castle was made into an animated film by
Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki in 2004. The film was nominated for an Academy
Award in 2006, and became one of the most financially successful Japanese films
in history. The author herself has also been honored with many prestigious
awards for the body of her work. She was given the British Fantasy Society’s
Karl Edward Wagner Award in 1999 for having made a significant impact on
fantasy, received a D.Lit from Bristol University in 2006, and won the Lifetime
Achievement Award at the World Fantasy Convention in 2007.
Born just outside London in 1934, Diana Wynne Jones had a
childhood that was “very vivid and often very distressing”—one that became the
fertile ground where her tremendous imagination took root. When the raids of
World War II reached London in 1939, the five-year-old girl and her two younger
sisters were torn from their suburban life and sent to Wales to live with their
grandparents. This was to be the first of many migrations, one of which brought
her family to Lane Head, a large manor in the author-populated Lake District
and former residence of John Ruskin’s secretary, W.G. Collingwood. This time
marked an important moment in Diana Wynne Jones’s life, where her writing
ambitions were magnified by, in her own words, “early marginal contacts with
the Great.” She confesses to having “offending Arthur Ransome by making a noise
on the shore beside his houseboat,” erasing a stack of drawings by the late
Ruskin himself in order to reuse the paper, and causing Beatrix Potter (who
also lived nearby) to complain about her and her sister’s behavior. “It struck
me,” Jones said, “that the Great were remarkably touchy and unpleasant, and I
thought I would like to be the same, without the unpleasantness.” Prompted by
her penny-pinching father’s refusal to buy the children any books, Diana Wynne
Jones wrote her first novel at age twelve and entertained her sisters with
readings of her stories. Those early stories—and much of her future work—were
inspired by a limited but crucial foundation of classics: Malory’s Morte D’Arthur,
The Arabian Nights, and Epics and Romances of the Middle Ages. Fantasy was
Jones’s passion from the start, despite receiving little support from her often
neglectful parents. This passion was fueled further during her tenure at St.
Anne’s College in Oxford, where lectures by J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis
increased her fascination with myth and legend. She married Medievalist John
Burrow in 1956; the couple have three sons and six grandchildren.
After a decade of rejections, Diana Wynne Jones’s first
novel, Changeover, was published in 1970. In 1973, she joined forces with her
lifelong literary agent, Laura Cecil, and in the four decades to follow, Diana
Wynne Jones wrote prodigiously, sometimes completing three titles in a single
year. Along the way she gained a fiercely loyal following; many of her admirers
became successful authors themselves, including Newbery Award winners Robin
McKinley and Neil Gaiman, and Newbery Honor Book author Megan Whalen Turner. A
conference dedicated solely to her work was held at the University of West
England, Bristol, in 2009. Diana Wynne Jones continued to write during her
battle with lung cancer, which ultimately took her life in March 2011. Her last
book, Earwig and the Witch, will be published by Greenwillow Books in 2012.